Scheduled for surgery? Acupuncture can help!
I came across an interesting article in the December 2020 publication of Acupuncture Today, titled: Scheduled for Surgery? Why you should get acupuncture first. This article describes a study on the benefits of acupuncture for surgery recovery, and I have copied it below.
The study found that receiving acupuncture before surgery has benefits in terms of managing postsurgical pain, reducing opioid use, and lowering anxiety.
In addition to receiving acupuncture before surgery, I would suggest also scheduling a treatment after the procedure. The purpose of postsurgical acupuncture would be to support the body’s healing, speed up recovery and help the body detox from the drugs used during anesthesia. Additionally, treatment can help reset the large intestine to promote bowel movements which are often disrupted by opioids and anesthesia medication.
Here is the full Acupuncture Today article:
Exciting new research suggests veteran surgical candidates who receive acupuncture prior to their procedure experience less postsurgical pain and are less likely to require opioids – a win-win for both veterans and the acupuncture profession.
Study findings presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), and subsequently detailed in an ASA press release, detailed the encouraging results involving more than 100 veterans randomly assigned to one of two groups prior to surgery.
In the first group, patients scheduled to undergo hip replacement received either traditional acupuncture (21 patients) or served as controls (also 21 patients). In the second group, patients scheduled to undergo one of several surgeries (gallbladder removal, hernia repair, etc.) received battlefield acupuncture (28 patients) or served as controls (36 patients). The press release did not specify when vets received acupuncture (i.e., how long before surgery).
In group #1, acupuncture recipients required nearly three times less morphine in the first 24 hours after surgery compared to controls. They also reported higher satisfaction scores regarding pain management, less pain and less anxiety than controls.
In group #2, patients receiving battlefield acupuncture required half the opioids 24 hours post-surgery compared to controls, and had significantly lower pain scores, higher satisfaction scores, and reported minimal nausea / vomiting post-procedure (only 3 percent vs. 38 percent of controls).
… lead study author Brinda Krish, DO, an anesthesiology resident at Detroit Medical Center [said]: "Clearly it is crucial to have multiple options for treating pain, and acupuncture is an excellent alternative. It is safe, cost effective and it works."